Franz Ferdinand’s assassination anniversary: Anti-war walk & film 27-28 June
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June 6, 2014 at 8:24 pm #82180chris knightParticipant
100 years since the assassination of Franz Ferdinand:
A TOUR OF WHITEHALL – remembering the victims and opponents of World War 1
Saturday 28 June, 1.30pm, Parliament SquareThe official commemorations for the start of WW1 will focus on the sacrifice and suffering of the war. But the statues displayed around Whitehall – of Lloyd George, Churchill and Haig – show that the British establishment still has few regrets about that suffering. These WW1 leaders were responsible for sending a million men to their deaths in a war that killed 16 million, a war that led, inexorably, to fascism and the horrors of WW2.
But Whitehall has an alternative history, a history of protests by suffragettes, soldiers and workers. Join us to explore that history. (Dressing up is optional. But it would be great if people came as anti-war suffragettes or ‘unknown soldiers’ – and the more Archduke Ferdinands and Duchess Sophies, the better!)
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‘Remembering the Real WWI’ presents:
Abel Gance’s anti-war film,
J’ACCUSE
Friday 27 June, 7pm, Cock Tavern, Phoenix Rd. NW1 1HB, Euston. Free admissionBy 1918, after almost four years of war, European society was in a state of shock. French soldiers had mutinied and the Russian revolution had shown an alternative to capitalism and war. But there still seemed no end to the slaughter.
In this atmosphere, Abel Gance resolved to make a film exposing ‘the horror of war’. The result was J’Accuse, a complex love story that culminates in stunning scenes of the war dead rising from their graves ‘to see if their sacrifice was worth anything at all.’ A veteran himself, Gance used French soldiers to play these ‘zombies’ – many of whom, in real life, went on to fight and die in the last battles of WW1.
Gance was inspired by the idea that ‘if all the dead came back, the war would stop at once.’ A romantic delusion? Yes, certainly, but more radical and thought-provoking than the barrage of TV programmes presently commemorating the centenary of the conflict.
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The Imperial War Museum will be opening its new WW1 exhibition on Saturday 19 July.
The museum was set up in 1917 by the very same generals and politicians who started the war. Join us on that day to commemorate the fact that it wasn’t victorious generals and politicians that ended the conflict, it was mutinying soldiers and striking workers – and they did so in revolutions that, almost, toppled the entire capitalist system.
For more details see: therealww1.wordpress.com
June 6, 2014 at 10:16 pm #102042steve colbornParticipantI must gainsay this! These "revolutions" did not, nor could not, topple Capitalism. The lack of class consciousness, and the economic reality of the time, vis a vis, being unable to meet the needs of the population, made this outcome impossible to achieve. It is meerest fantasy to suppose that the intellectual, or material conditions existed circa WW1, for a Socialist revolution to succeed. Fantasize all you want, the objective, class emancipation was an impossibility.
June 7, 2014 at 12:29 pm #102043AnonymousInactivechris knight wrote:it was mutinying soldiers and striking workers – and they did so in revolutions that, almost, toppled the entire capitalist system.There is no evidence that capitalism was under threat or in fear of being 'toppled'. Far from it, the revolution ensured the continued developmdnt of global capitalism of which Russia now plays its part.
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